Gender differences in mental health prevalence in autism

Gender differences in mental health prevalence in autism Felicity Sedgewick, Jenni Leppanen, Kate Tchanturia Advances in Autism, Vol. ahead-of-print, No. ahead-of-print, pp.- Mental health conditions are known to be more common amongst autistic than non-autistic people. To date, there is little work exploring gender differences in mental health amongst autistic people and no work including non-binary/trans people. This paper aims to address this gap. This was a large-scale online study, with 948 participants between 18 and 81 years old. Participants self-reported autism, anxiety, depression and eating disorder status. Analyses were run examining gender differences in the rates of these conditions in each group. Autistic people are more likely to have anxiety and depression than non-autistic people of all genders. Autistic women and non-binary people experienced mental health issues at higher rates than men and at similar rates to each other. Autistic people were twice as likely as non-autistic people to have all eating disorders. Further, gendered patterns of eating disorders seen in the non-autistic population are also present in the autistic population. There are inherent issues with self-report of diagnoses online, but this study showed that using screening questionnaires is effective. This is the first paper to look at gender differences in common mental health issues amongst autistic and non-autistic adults. It highlights...
Source: Advances in Autism - Category: Child Development Authors: Source Type: research